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Illinois Vehicle Bill of Sale Generator

Requirements vary by state. Always recommended as a record of the transaction.

Fill out the seller, buyer, and vehicle details below. The document updates as you type, and you can print or download a plain-text copy. Nothing leaves your browser — this generator stores no data.

Illinois requirements at a glance

  • Conditional

    Bill of sale

    Requirements vary by state. Always recommended as a record of the transaction.

  • ?Verify

    Notarization

    Notarization requirements vary. Check with the official state agency.

  • Yes

    Odometer disclosure

    Required by federal law for vehicles under 10 years old and under 16,000 lbs.

Generate your Illinois bill of sale

Fill in the fields and the document updates as you type. We don’t store anything — the form runs entirely in your browser.

Seller
Buyer
Vehicle
Sale terms
Illinois-specific details

Illinois uses Form VSD 190 as the primary transfer document.

We don’t store anything. The form runs entirely in your browser — no data is sent to a server.

VEHICLE BILL OF SALE — ILLINOIS This Bill of Sale is made on [DATE] between the Seller and Buyer named below for the vehicle described herein. SELLER Name: [SELLER NAME] Address: [SELLER ADDRESS] BUYER Name: [BUYER NAME] Address: [BUYER ADDRESS] VEHICLE Year: [YEAR] Make: [MAKE] Model: [MODEL] Color: [COLOR] Body type: [BODY TYPE] VIN: [VIN] Odometer: [ODOMETER] SALE TERMS Sale price: $0.00 Sale date: [DATE] Payment method: Not specified ILLINOIS-SPECIFIC DETAILS ODOMETER DISCLOSURE The seller certifies the odometer reading shown above to be the actual mileage of the vehicle, unless one of the following statements is checked: [ ] The mileage stated exceeds the odometer's mechanical limit. [ ] The odometer reading is NOT the actual mileage. Warning: odometer discrepancy. AS-IS SALE The vehicle is sold AS-IS without warranty, expressed or implied. The buyer accepts the vehicle in its current condition. SIGNATURES Seller signature: _______________________________ Date: ______________ Printed name: [SELLER NAME] Buyer signature: _______________________________ Date: ______________ Printed name: [BUYER NAME]

What to do with the bill of sale once it’s printed

Illinois title transfers go through Illinois Secretary of State — Vehicle Services. Follow these steps in order.

  1. Fill in every field on the bill of sale.
  2. Both parties sign and date. Illinois does not require notarization for private vehicle sales.
  3. Print two copies — one each for buyer and seller.
  4. Buyer completes Form VSD 190 (the Illinois Application for Vehicle Transaction) — the seller signs the title.
  5. Buyer mails or hand-delivers the signed title, VSD 190, this bill of sale, and the title/registration fees to the Illinois Secretary of State.

Official Illinois forms & resources

Frequently asked questions

Is a bill of sale required in Illinois?

Requirements vary by state. Always recommended as a record of the transaction.

Does the bill of sale need to be notarized in Illinois?

It depends. Notarization requirements vary. Check with the official state agency.

How many copies of the bill of sale should we sign?

Sign at least two original copies — one for the buyer and one for the seller. If a lender or insurance carrier is involved, sign a third copy for them. Each party should keep their copy with their vehicle records for at least 5 years.

What if Illinois has its own official bill of sale form?

Illinois publishes Form VSD 190 — Application for Vehicle Transaction. You can use the official form, the document this generator produces, or both. Some county offices prefer the state-issued form — check with the office that will receive your paperwork.

What's the deadline for the buyer to register the vehicle in Illinois?

Deadlines vary by state — check Illinois Secretary of State — Vehicle Services for the current deadline before completing the sale.

Related Illinois resources

Last reviewed: 2026-01-01 · Reviewed by the Car Paperwork editorial team · Based on official Illinois Secretary of State — Vehicle Services sources · Independent resource · Not legal advice